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Snow on the ground means nothing at Sterling International, the Spokane Valley company that’s buzzing around the clock making traps targeting the stinging bugs of spring and summer.Sterling, which has been in business more than 25 years, has just released a product six years in the making, a three-in-one plastic trap it calls the WHY.As in wasps, hornets and yellowjackets. The privately held company has made a yellowjacket trap since the late 1980s. But no one in the bug-stopping industry had developed a unit that zapped all three.Sterling says the new WHY trap does the job …

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Sterling International photo

The WHY insect trap is seen in this photo. The trap, manufactured by Sterling Incorporated of Spokane Valley, is designed to attract wasps, hornets and yellowjackets.(Full-size photo)

Snow on the ground means nothing at Sterling International, the Spokane Valley company that’s buzzing around the clock making traps targeting the stinging bugs of spring and summer.

Sterling, which has been in business more than 25 years, has just released a product six years in the making, a three-in-one plastic trap it calls the WHY.

As in wasps, hornets and yellowjackets.

The privately held company has made a yellowjacket trap since the late 1980s. But no one in the bug-stopping industry had developed a unit that zapped all three.

Sterling says the new WHY trap does the job.

“On our packaging, we list 20 distinct species that it catches. None of our competitors can claim to catch all of those species,” said Stephanie Herrmann, the company’s director of marketing and communications.

It took researchers seven years to develop the new trap. Finding the right combination of nontoxic attractants and trap design is a complex process, said Herrmann.

The basic reusable Sterling yellowjacket trap has a single opening in the lower part of the unit. The WHY trap uses two openings, on top and underneath. “Our research showed that the attractants (targeting all three bugs) are more effective when separated. If close together they tend to negate each other,” Herrmann said.

In addition to the regular production team of 34, Sterling added 22 seasonal workers to meet spring and summer demand, Herrmann said.

The WHY trap is now being shipped to retailers back East and in the South, which expect warmer weather ahead of other parts of the country.

U.S. hardware and garden retailer Lowe’s ordered 26,000 units of the WHY trap, said Herrmann. Other large orders have gone to Wal-Mart, Northwest bulk retailer Bi-Mart and Home Depot stores.

Adding the WHY, which retails for $13 to $15, has helped the bottom line, Herrmann said, noting, “our total sales revenue doubled (in January 2009) compared to last year.”

Company founder and president Rod Schneidmiller built the company over the past 20 years on products that use only natural attractants instead of pesticides or toxic chemicals.

Sterling has no plans to discontinue production of its first big seller, the plastic yellowjacket traps that sell across the country for $10 to $12.

But the WHY allows the company to build a larger sales presence in the Midwest and East, where there are more wasps and hornets, Herrmann said. As expected, sales of the simple yellowjacket trap have fallen about 15 percent compared with the same point a year ago.

Sterling researchers are working on new products, including deterrents for ants and mosquitoes, Herrmann said.